- Counterparts Lite (Mac App)
- POEditor (Web App)
- brightec Online XLIFF Editor (Web App)
-
-
Save martnst/8597b27bb52baf00f1ef to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Don't use the online editor at Brightec (http://xliff.brightec.co.uk/). After spending valuable time translating, you will be forced to use your Twitter login to get your translated file. The login prompt states:
This application will be able to:
- Read Tweets from your timeline.
- See who you follow, and follow new people.
- Update your profile.
- Post Tweets for you.
- See your email address.
Seconding do NOT use the editor from Brightec. You are navigated away from your translations entry page and they hold the data hostage so you will lose all your work unless you give them your Twitter account. They also do not support Angular translations.
Poedit supports XLIFF since v2.2, including Angular files (GitHub issue: vslavik/poedit#408).
Loca Studio supports the XLIFF 1.2 files exported by Xcode.
- Free
- Automatic QA checks
- Native app
- Distributed on the Mac App Store, sandboxed
(full disclosure: I am the lead developer)
So in conclusion, no free tool exists that lets you edit , create and update translations files using xliff format.
Localizely also has editor for XLIFF files.
So in conclusion, no free tool exists that lets you edit , create and update translations files using xliff format.
Incorrect, you can use Swordfish for that: https://github.com/rmraya/Swordfish
Take a look at this tutorial: https://www.codeandweb.com/babeledit/tutorials/how-to-translate-your-angular-app-with-xlf-files
Hi, I made my own tool for Angular translations (supports XLIFF 1.2 and 2.0)
Repo: https://github.com/DavidOndrus/xliff-translator-tool